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A CBS News/New York Times poll showed that of all of the political ads of the 1988 presidential campaign, this one had the greatest impact on respondents. The percentage of poll respondents who felt Bush was "tough enough" on crime rose from 23 percent in July 1988 to 61 percent in late October 1988 while the proportion saying Dukakis was "not tough enough" on crime rose from 36 to 49 percent ...
Televised attack ads rose to prominence in the United States in the 1960s, especially since Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations require over-the-air commercial TV stations with licenses issued by the FCC—effectively all regulated TV stations, since others would either be public television or be pirated—to air political ads ...
In that year's Iowa caucus, held on February 8, 1988, Bush finished in third, behind winner Dole and runner-up Robertson. Bush's support then began to deteriorate, partly because former Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. had recently endorsed Dole. The Bush campaign then decided to produce an attack ad against Dole. Ailes got the idea to ...
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A series of attack ads that have aired on TV in recent weeks claim that Wiley Nickel, a Democratic state senator and criminal defense attorney who is running for Congress, has represented people ...
The 30-second TV spot attacked conservative columnist Pat Buchanan, who was challenging Bush for the Republican nomination, for owning a foreign-produced Mercedes-Benz and for criticizing his American-made vehicles while speaking in favor of American manufacturing.
Bush previously claimed that ads from her 2020 opponent, former Rep. William Lacy Clay, who is also Black, darkened her skin. In 2022, a firm working for New York Rep. Jamaal Bowman’s (D ...
NBC News reports that the Manhattan District Attorney’s office initially wanted Donald Trump to turn himself in today. The network cites the former president’s attorney Joe Tacopina.